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Getting from point A to point B in the 10 most dangerous states for pedestrians in 2015 shouldn’t be done without a pinch of extra caution. After all, as you may have read in our article, the 10 most dangerous states for drivers in America in 2015, car accident victims are increasingly more often innocent people and not the ones responsible for the accident.

Pedestrian accidents range from jaywalking and getting hit to people righteously abiding by the rules but nevertheless getting swept off the street by a speeding teenager in an expensive car. There are far too many ways to get hurt when you’re happily waddling down a street while machines that are 30 times your weight move with at least ten times your speed just feet away from you. This is why there are rules restricting both the traffic and the pedestrians. While the cliche is that rules are made to be broken, such a breach of common sense could result in a series of unfortunate events, aka death.

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If you haven’t had your fresh cup of useless facts today, you might be interested to know that the first (known) pedestrian to be struck and killed by a vehicle was named Bridget Driscoll. This occurred in 1896. The Irish woman, who at the time of her death was in her mid forties, was strolling along the grounds of London’s Crystal Palace with her teenage daughter and a friend. At that time, a man named Arthur Edsall is suspected to have been moving with the brain-warping speed of around 5 miler per hour when he struck the woman and killed her. This happened with a vehicle that could achieve a maximum speed of thirteen miles per hour, in a zone where the limit was twelve. You can see how this compares to today’s world and even though our cars are lighter and don’t have as many sharp edges, it doesn’t mean damage won’t be done.

The United States, like always, could not afford to be left behind – even in matters of vehicular homocide. So the first fatal accident involving a pedestrian there followed in 1899. A man called Henry Bliss lost his life under the wheels of an electric taxicab, setting the starting point of a more than a centur-long history of frequent pedestrian accidents. Let’s take a look at where they’re most likely to occur, ranked compositely using statistics from the National Traffic Highway Safety Administration and Walk Score’s walkability ranking.

10. Texas

The south state starts off this countdown by taking the tenth spot. Texas has previously headed the nationwide rankings for something other than pedestrian deaths – it was the state with most traffic-related deaths.

9. Arizona

The ninth spot goes to the beautiful state of Arizona where pedestrian accident fatalities has risen in the past few years, making the authorities take measures such as widening sidewalks and additional landscaping.

8. Hawaii

Surfing only happens on water and as much as you would like it to not be so, the people of Hawaii use cars to get around just as much as we all do. The police of Hawaii do admit that there is also an increase in the drugs and alcohol related traffic incidents.

7. Nevada

Nevada takes the seventh spot in this list due to the fact that compared to the average, the major cities of Nevada are heavily car dependent, meaning that people would have to walk considerable distances to reach even some of the more basic amenities.

6. North Carolina

The sixth spot on the list of the 10 most dangerous states for pedestrians in 2015 goes to North Carolina. The densely populated state ranks even worse in traffic fatalities overall.

5. Florida

The fifth spot on this unfortunate list goes to Florida. Ranked by total amount of traffic and pedestrian accident deaths, Florida ranks third nationwide but as far as the likelihood of an accident occurring, it only ranks fifth.

4. Louisiana

Louisiana is one of the states that statistically don’t rank among the worst as far as traffic related deaths go but pedestrian fatalities per a number of its population put it in the fourth spot nationwide.

3. South Carolina

Getting closer to the first but not quite yet, the third spot goes to South Carolina, which is only the tenth worse in total pedestrian fatalities nationwide but the third in the frequency of their occurrence.

2. New Mexico

Ironically, per capita, New Mexico is the twentieth lowest in overall traffic accidents. However, its pedestrian fatality rate puts it in the second spot of our list.

1. Delaware

The first spot in our countdown of the 10 most dangerous states for pedestrians in 2015 goes to Delaware, where the rates fluctuate considerable and the overall ones are some of the lowest in the nation. However, per a hundred thousand of its population, Delaware takes the leading spot.